Reports arriving from southern Kandahar province say that a US [World Tyrant]-NATO helicopter conducting military maneuvers in Takhtapul district has been shot by Mujahideen [troops of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan].

The helicopter was shot near Chaghri mountain at around midday, plunging the chopper onto the ground as well as killing all invaders onboard which prompted the enemy to cordon off the area using tanks before evacuating the burnt corpses from the burning wreckage.

In an article published Saturday by the Lebanese al-Binaa’ daily, [Syrian Arab Republic Deputy Foreign and Expatriates Minister Fayssal] Mikdad said that Western [World Tyrant / NATO] double standards won’t make Syria balk at the mission ahead.

“The Syrians are brushing aside all the talk arising from an inferiority complex of some and the guilt complex of others. The Syrians are writing down victory once again.”

As he categorically dismissed reports blaming the Syrian government for the use of chlorine gas, Mikdad said that the fresh accusations are part of campaign intended to be “a smokescreen to cover up reports that have pinned responsibility for previous chemical attacks in Syria on [the Turkish Prime Minister] Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government.”

Civil rights leaders, for example, raised in discussions with the White House the issue of employers who use data to map where job applicants live and then rate them based on that, particularly in low-paying service jobs.

Some employers might worry that if an applicant lives far enough away from a job, he or she may not stay in the position for long.

As more jobs move out of the city and into the suburbs, this could create a hiring system based on class.

“You’re essentially being dinged for a job for really arbitrary characteristics,” said Chris Calabrese, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union.

“Use of this data has a real impact on peoples’ lives.”

The civil rights advocates could not offer specific examples of such injustices, but instead talked about how the data could be used in a discriminatory way.

Similarly, anti-discrimination laws for housing make it illegal to target customers based on credit reports. But the laws don’t address the use of other data points that could group people into clusters based on information gleaned from social media.